Noted gay community historian Allan Berube died unexpectedly
Tuesday, December 11, due to complications related to stomach ulcers. He was
61.

Mr. Berube, who lived in the Bay Area for many years before
moving to New York, is best known for his 1990 book, Coming Out Under Fire:
The History of Gay Men and Women in World War II.

"Allan really was a genius and a visionary intellectual
and activist," said history and anthropology scholar Gayle Rubin.
"His passing is an immense loss to me, to queer scholarship, and to the
GLBTQ community."

Mr. Berube was born in Springfield, Massachusetts, on
December 3, 1946. He grew up in a working class household, and lived for a time
in a trailer park in Bayonne, New Jersey. The family later moved to
Massachusetts, where he went to prep school on a scholarship.

Mr. Berube attended the University of Chicago, but dropped
out before graduation and moved to Boston in the late 1960s, working as an
anti-war organizer with the American Friends Service Committee. After coming
out in 1969, he got involved with the gay liberation movement, and before long
moved to San Francisco and joined a commune of gay craftspeople.

In 1978, Mr. Berube helped start the San Francisco Gay and
Lesbian History Project, one of the first history study groups to emerge out of
the gay liberation movement. He was a founding member when the project evolved
into the Gay and Lesbian (now GLBT) Historical Society in 1985.

Mr. Berube's World War II research was inspired by a cache
of letters between gay servicemen that a friend of his neighbor had salvaged
from the trash. Over the course of several years, he conducted interviews with
dozens of military men and women. Though homosexuals at the time were officially
barred, the military offered many young men and women a ticket out of their
hometowns and, Mr. Berube argued, laid the groundwork for the gay rights
movement.

Coming Out Under Fire
won a Lambda Literary Award and was adapted into an award-winning documentary
by Arthur Dong. Mr. Berube's research has often been cited in congressional
debates about the military's gay ban.

"Berube's history of lesbian and gay troops during
World War II is considered one of the
definitive works on gays in the military," Steve Ralls of the Servicemembers Legal Defense Network wrote on the organization's Web site. "He will be greatly missed, but
his contribution to our movement and community will always persevere."

The historical society holds Mr. Berube's World War II research
materials, and several key items are on display in the current "Out
Ranks" exhibit, running through June.

Mr. Berube is remembered for his high-quality research as an
independent scholar outside the realm of academia. Without university support,
he worked for years at low- and mid-wage jobs â€“ including ticket-taker at
the Castro Theatre â€“ in order to devote himself to community history. In
1996, he was awarded a MacArthur Foundation "genius grant," which
gave him a measure of financial stability.

"He didn't even finish his bachelor's degree in terms
of formal schooling, yet he produced one of the most influential books of gay
and lesbian history and kicked off serious study in that domain," said Gerard
Koskovich, a founding member and former board member of the historical society.

"Allan's scholarly work was simply foundational, not
only for contemporary GLBT history, but also for GLBTQ studies more
generally," added Rubin.

Though best known for his work on gays in the military, Mr.
Berube's earlier research focused on "passing" women (those who
dressed and lived as men) and the history of gay and lesbian bars. He traveled
widely, presenting talks and slide shows about his work, and in the early 1990s
was a lecturer at Stanford University and the University of California at Santa
Cruz.

In addition to his book, Mr. Berube wrote for several LGBT
and progressive publications, using his research to support his activism.
During the controversy over closing the city's bathhouses in the early years of
the AIDS epidemic, he wrote a still-definitive essay on the history and social
function of gay baths, which was republished in the 1996 anthology Policing
Public Sex, as similar issues again came to
the fore.

At the time of his death, Mr. Berube was working on a
history of queer men in the Marine Cooks and Stewards Union in the 1930s and
1940s.

Robert Haaland, a political organizer for SEIU Local 1021,
recalled that Mr. Berube presented a slide show about this work and co-led a
workshop on union history at the 1996 Pride At Work convention, and marched
with the group in the Pride parade.

"We will miss him deeply, and we will honor his
contributions as we mourn and organize," said Haaland.

Mr. Berube moved to New York City in the late 1990s, and
from there to the Catskills resort town of Liberty, where he and his partner,
John Nelson, owned a bed and breakfast and ran an antiques shop. Mr. Berube was
twice elected as a village trustee, and was active in the effort to preserve
the town's historic character.

"All of his work was characterized by a passion for
detail, an unerring sense of significance, and the vast compassion and
generosity of spirit that characterized his life as well as his writing,"
said Rubin.